Centre for Social Evolution, Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen, Universitetsparken 15, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark.
Front Zool. 2010 Jun 30;7:20. doi: 10.1186/1742-9994-7-20.
Ants typically distinguish nestmates from non-nestmates based on the perception of colony-specific chemicals, particularly cuticular hydrocarbons present on the surface of the ants' exoskeleton. These recognition cues are believed to play an important role in the formation of vast so-called supercolonies that have been described for some invasive ant species, but general conclusions about the role of these cues are hampered by only few species being studied. Here we use data on cuticular hydrocarbons, aggression and microsatellite genetic markers to investigate the interdependence of chemical recognition cues, genetic distance and nestmate discrimination in the pharaoh ant (Monomorium pharaonis), a widespread pest species, and ask whether introduced populations of this species are genetically differentiated and exhibit intraspecific aggression.
Microsatellite analyses of a total of 35 colonies from four continents revealed extremely high levels of genetic differentiation between almost all colonies (FST = 0.751 +/- 0.006 SE) and very low within-colony diversity. This implies that at least 34 and likely hundreds more independent lineages of this ant have spread worldwide. Aggression tests involving workers from 14 different colonies showed only low levels of aggression, even between colonies that were geographically and/or genetically very distant. Chemical analyses of groups of worker ants showed that all colonies had the same cuticular compounds, which varied only quantitatively among colonies. There was a positive correlation between geographical and genetic distance, but no other significant relationships were detected between aggression, chemical profile, genetic distance and geographical distance.
The pharaoh ant has a global invasion history of numerous independent introductions resulting in genetically highly differentiated colonies typically displaying surprisingly low levels of intraspecific aggression, a behaviour that may have evolved in the native range or by lineage selection in the introduced range.
蚂蚁通常基于对蚁群特有的化学物质的感知来区分巢内个体和非巢内个体,特别是存在于蚂蚁外骨骼表面的角质层烃。这些识别线索被认为在形成所谓的超级蚁群中起着重要作用,对于一些入侵性蚂蚁物种已经有了描述,但由于仅研究了少数几个物种,因此对这些线索的作用的一般结论受到了阻碍。在这里,我们使用角质层烃、攻击性和微卫星遗传标记的数据来研究法老蚁(Monomorium pharaonis)的化学识别线索、遗传距离和巢内个体识别之间的相互依存关系,法老蚁是一种广泛存在的害虫物种,并询问该物种的引入种群是否在遗传上存在分化,并表现出种内攻击性。
对来自四大洲的总共 35 个蚁群的微卫星分析显示,几乎所有蚁群之间的遗传分化程度极高(FST=0.751+/-0.006 SE),而蚁群内的多样性非常低。这意味着至少有 34 个,甚至可能有数百个法老蚁的独立谱系已经在全球范围内传播。涉及来自 14 个不同蚁群的工蚁的攻击性测试显示,即使在地理和/或遗传上非常遥远的蚁群之间,攻击性也很低。对工蚁群体的化学分析表明,所有蚁群都具有相同的角质化合物,只是在蚁群之间存在数量上的差异。地理和遗传距离之间存在正相关,但在攻击性、化学特征、遗传距离和地理距离之间没有发现其他显著关系。
法老蚁具有全球性的入侵历史,有许多独立的引入导致了遗传上高度分化的蚁群,这些蚁群通常表现出令人惊讶的低水平的种内攻击性,这种行为可能是在其原生范围或引入范围通过谱系选择进化而来的。